New data from the National Grid reveals that 2015 was a record-breaking year for wind energy generation, with onshore and offshore wind farms setting new weekly, monthly, quarterly and annual records. EurActiv’s partner edie.net reports.

According to figures, 11% of the UK’s electricity was sourced from wind power in 2015 – up from 9.5% the previous year. Overall, wind provided enough electricity to meet the demands of more than 8.25 million homes – almost a third of UK households – compared to 6.7 million homes in 2014.

Commenting on the figures, RenewableUK’s director of policy Dr Gordan Edge said: “This is a great way to start the New Year – the wind industry can be proud that it has shattered weekly, monthly, quarterly and annual generation records in 2015. This rewrites the record books. We’ve had a bumper harvest thanks to increased deployment and superb wind speeds.”

He added that, “It also demonstrates why the government should continue to support wind energy, as we’re delivering on our commitment to keep Britain powered up. We can continue to increase the proportion of the nation’s electricity which we provide as we move away from fossil fuels to clean sources of power.”

New records

With more people at home over the Christmas period and colder and darker days creating more demand for energy, December 2015 set a new monthly record for wind generation, with wind power supplying 17% of Britain’s increased electricity demand. December also saw a new weekly record, where in the last week of the month – including Christmas – around 20% of electricity demand was sourced from wind energy.

Quarterly records were also set during the three month period from October to December, with 13% of electricity demand met by wind, beating the previous record of 12% set in the first quarter of 2015.

In total, renewables such as wind, solar and hydro accounted for more than 18% of all UK electricity in 2015, up from slightly less than 14%. This represents a rise of 31% in the share of total generation. The proportion supplied by gas, oil and coal fell from 58.7% to 52%.

RenewableUK stated that wind energy drove £1.25 billion of investment into Britain’s economy last year, with the industry now employing 30,500 people. The European Wind Energy Association has also stated that wind energy could be the largest power supply source in the EU by 2030 as long as governments drive ambition in climate and energy policies.

Well I don’t like you – but feel pity for the UK peasants being screwed by tory-vermin – perhaps you as one such?

0

| Hide Replies ∧

Joe Thorpe

07/01/2016 09:15

What time of the day what was the demand when this wind energy was being generated? It comes it goes at the whim of nature. It’s useless!

0

| Hide Replies ∧

Mike Parr

07/01/2016 10:23

Still looking for the two neurons that constitute your brain? (you probably left them in the glass with your teeth).

0

| Hide Replies ∧

Samuel Morgan

07/01/2016 10:24

Difficult to understand why your definition of an energy source that produces 11% of the UK’s power is “useless”.

0

| Hide Replies ∧

Josef Zbořil

07/01/2016 13:46

Sorry, but such an unpredictable intermittent source must be backed up by fossil/nukes and you should know that the UK electricity system is operated with nearly no safety margin. And, its “climate effect” is close to zero while its economic effect drives more and more people into energy poverty. That is why it really matters. Wonder why Mike with his experience can write such a bullshit in the first comment! Good luck with such experts!

0

| Hide Replies ∧

Joe Thorpe

07/01/2016 14:40

Well today the windmills near me aren’t moving yet they were roaring away during the storm last night when everyone was in bed, is that a clue?

0

| Hide Replies ∧

Josef Zbořil

08/01/2016 08:58

Well, close enough, but something like this applies: you need your power in the socket 24 h 7 day. And windmills run roughly 30 pct of time inland and up to 45 pct offshore. Thus, if there is accumulation (not too much available) The system would need about three times more of generating capacity in wind compared to stable fossil/nuke generation. The PV load rate is about 11.5 pct only! So much of ímbalance that blackouts can occur if there is not sufficient safety margins in the grid that can absorb about 10 pct of intermittent powet only. That’ s… Read more »